Our conference coverage continues this week when we air Tom’s visit to the 2010 Contingency Planning and Management EAST show at NYC’s Javits Center. Commissioner Bruno from the NYC OEM and Amy Herman took time to speak with Tom at the early November event. Find out more about their work and other guest on the SHOW PAGE.

We are still taking suggestions and feedback for 2011. What topics are important to you? What topics can we dive into that are still alien to you? We pride ourselves in devoting 3/4 of our show to in depth interviews with guests. While most news outlets bring you tech appetizers, we cover a topic from soup to nuts.

Next week, we are going to close the year with our FLASH conference coverage. We have a contingency if that doesn’t work out… like related news to keep you busy while we try to find that audio file…

Hope you had a wonderful Thanksgiving. Now that you are as stuffed as the bird, let’s get back to TechTalk before we are all caught in the holiday rush.

Our show with Tom Gutnick on BROWSER WARS is ready for download. Along with the streaming show or download, we also updated the LAST WEEK’S SHOW PAGE to include a question from a listener about managing your bookmarks across multiple machines and Tom’s response.

And what’s on the menu for this week you ask? Tony Bradley is back to tackle the implications of social networking at work. What are employers worried about? What should employees know. Our host, Tom D’Auria, and guest, Tony Bradley, will cover that and more on this week’s show. Find out more about the show and our Week In Review on the THIS WEEK’S SHOW PAGE.

Here are some articles to keep you busy until the show comes on KFNX Sunday, 12/5 at 5pm EST | 4pm CST | 3pm MST | 2pm PST

That’s not the first and probably won’t be the last Thanksgiving reference you hit on the web in the next few days*. It does sit in a sliver-sized union on the ‘Thanksgiving’ and ‘UNIX’ Holiday/Computer Reference Venn diagram I made. Speaking of references, this week’s show ‘BROWSER WARS‘ is ripe for them. For your sake, I am saving those all for the SHOW PAGE because Tom Gutnick is on the show this week talking BROWSER WARS on Sunday, November 28 at 5pm EST | 3pm MST.

Happy Thanksgiving to all of you in radio land and on the other side of the intertubes! See the previous sentence, this one, the blog post title and below titles that did not make the cut as examples how single exclamation points are where it’s at! Two is bit much and three is just trying too hard.

The show will air Sunday at 1pm EST. Due to sports coverage on KFNX, you can catch us even earlier on Sunday.

Here at TechTalk, we not only talk about the cloud – we rely on it. We use WordPress.com for our website, Google for our imitechtalk.com mail and a plethora of other services that rely on the cloud – Twitter, bit.ly and Flickr come to mind at first thought. While the majority of this data is data we want you to see, we want to be sure it will be there and safe from other people trying to pass along information as us. What does all of that rely on? Security.

This week, Tom is joined by Craig Balding who was our very first Cloud Computing guest. Craig will let us know what is going on with service providers, how security models are evolving and a new project he is developing. Find out more on the SHOW PAGE. Don’t forget that the show will be on at 1pm EST …also don’t forget that time goes back an hour everywhere except Arizona.

Don’t forget that Friday, November 5 is GrowSmart Biz conference at the Renaissance Washington DC with friends at the Washington Business Journal. Be sure to tell Shashi Bellamkonda hello if you see him…or just tweet him.

We have a great live show on deck this week! Phillip Rodokanakis joins Tom to scare the heck out of you just in time for Halloween. We are talking Digital Forensics this week. What kind of data can be recovered? Encrypted hard drives, deleted browsing history along with the piles and piles of information your smart phone and iPad is racking up on you. To find out more, check out the SHOW PAGE.

So, people in glass houses should be careful what they do on a computer, but they should also have conferences. And there is no better glass house than New York City’sJavits Center – the home of Interop New York 2010. Along with coverage from the floor and sessions next week, we are also excited to have the show’s general manager Lenny Heymann call in to kick the conference off live on TechTalk! Lenny will give an overview of the event and details about keynote speakers, sessions and some of the many exhibitors at this year’s event.

Along with the Interop Kick Off, our Week in Review has unicorn meat from the Wall Street Journal about a Verizon-ready iPhone, how your NYC subway ride is about to get more annoying and we’ll tell you all about a former water storage tank that was turned into a data center if we have the time. For the link to listen and the spot where the podcast will drop, head over to this week’s SHOW PAGE.

New York City‘s Information Technology infrastructure is a big business. The Department of Information Technology and Telecommunications (DoITT) Commissioner Carole Post joins Tom this week to talk NYC IT. For more information on the show, check out the SHOW PAGE. What is the agency’s direction? How are they staying social? As a big user of energy, what steps are being taken to increase computing power and reduce the overall footprint?

That and more, this Sunday at 3pm MST | 6pm EDT.

Our Week In Review starts in the City with details about Mayor Bloomberg‘s announcement of the partnership between CUNY and IBM; we let you in on who wants to tap your texts; and help you get your online identity back if your Gmail, Hotmail, Yahoo!, Facebook or Twitter account is hacked.

This week Michael Clark from Microsoft joins Tom to cover using the cloud as a business accelerator. Head over to the [SHOW PAGE] to find out the details.

We’ve covered cloud computing for a while now. As the technologies underlying the cloud and the related services have matured, so too has our coverage. We first focused on ‘what is the cloud’. And while that definition can still be a moving target depending who you ask, there is no doubt the cloud is no longer a buzzword. Cloud computing not only delivers applications like email, it is evolving platforms that change the way you internet and changing the way IT services are delivered from small businesses to the largest enterprises (Guess who manages McDonald’s email? Autodesk, Nokia? California Emergency Management Agency?). This pay as you go computing is also lowering barriers to enter applications into various markets.

Even if you are not sure if the cloud is right for you, it is the right time to look into the cloud.